Presentation Information
Presenters should prepare to speak for approximately 30 minutes. Projection equipment will be provided, but presenters will need to bring their own laptops (and adapters for Macs).

Healing the Rift? Social Networks and Reconciliation between Obama and Clinton Convention Delegates in 2008Michael Heaney
University of Florida, mtheaney@ufl.edu
Co-Authors: Seth Masket, University of Denver; Joanne Miller, University of Minnesota; Dara Z. Strolovitch, University of Minnesota

It's Not Personal; It's Strictly Business: A Social Networks Analysis of Internal Party Cleavages, 1972-2008Hans Noel
University of Michigan, hansnoel@umich.edu

Panel 2
Belfer Case Study Room (Room S020)

Social Networks and the Mass MediaDavid Siegel
Florida State University, dsiegel@fsu.edu

Social Politics: The Contagion of Political BehaviorBetsy Sinclair
University of Chicago, betsy@uchicago.edu

Unsolved at any speed: the role of information flow in problem-solving and innovationDaniel Enemark
University of California, San Diego, denemark@ucsd.edu
Co-Authors: Ramamohan Paturi, University of California, San Diego; Mathew McCubbins, University of California, San Diego

Expertise and Bias in Political CommunicationAlex Mayer
University of California, Davis, akmayer@ucdavis.edu
Co-Authors: T.K. Ahn, Korea University; Alex K. Mayer, University of California, Davis; John B. Ryan, University of California, Davis

Panel 2
Belfer Case Study Room (Room S020)

Lethal Connections: What explains why some terrorist organizations are highly networked while others are unconnected?Victor Asal
University at Albany SUNY, vasal@email.albany.edu
Co-Authors: Hyun Hee, University at Albany SUNY; R. Karl Rethemeyer, University at Albany SUNY

Revolving Doors and Foreign Policy Collective Decision-Making: A Network AnalysisRenato Corbetta
University of Alabama-Birmingham, corbetta@uab.edu
Co-Authors: Charles Gibson, University of Alabama-Birmingham; Benjamin Hall, University of Alabama-Birmingham

Panel 3
Room S250

Social Network Analysis in Program Evaluation: Measuring the Impact of the State Health Leadership Initiative on the Creation of Social CapitalInes Mergel
Syracuse University, iamergel@maxwell.syr.edu
Co-Author: David Lazer, Harvard University

Network Structure and Social CapitalJohn T Scholz
Florida State University, jscholz@fsu.edu
Co-Authors: Ramiro Berardo, University of Arizona; Meredith Whiteman, Florida State University

The m-STAR Model of Dynamic, Endogenous Interdependence and Network-Behavior Coevolution in Comparative & International Political EconomyRobert Franzese
University of Michigan, franzese@umich.edu
Co-Authors: Jude C. Hays, University of Illinois; Aya Kachi, University of Illinois

A Social Network Analysis of American Tax Jurisprudence (1990-2008)Lilian V. Faulhaber
Harvard Law School, lfaulhab@law.harvard.edu
Co-Author: Daniel Katz, University of Michigan

The Development of Community Structure in the Supreme Court's Network of CitationsDaniel Katz
University of Michigan, dmartink@umich.edu
Co-Authors: Jon Zelner, University of Michigan; Michael Bommarito, University of Michigan; James Spriggs, Washington University, St. Louis; James Fowler, University of California, San Diego

Legal Precedents, Judicial Discretion, & Diffusion of the Strict Liability Rule for Manufacturing Defects, 1962-87Donald Smythe
California Western School of Law, DSmythe@cwsl.edu
Co-Author: Robert Bird, University of Connecticut

Panel 2
Belfer Case Study Room (Room S020)

The Implications of Political Networks on the Career Decisions of State LegislatorsStella Rouse
University of Maryland, srouse@gvpt.umd.edu
Co-Authors: Kathleen A. Bratton, Louisiana State University; Jas Sullivan, Louisiana State University

All Politics Is (Not) Local: The Structure of Lobbying in North CarolinaJohn Scott
University of North Carolina, jcscott@email.unc.edu
Co-Author: Jeff Summerlin-Long, University of North Carolina